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Definition of Starvation acidosis
1. Noun. Acidosis in which the acidity results from lack of food which leads to fat catabolism which in turn releases acidic ketone bodies.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Starvation Acidosis
Literary usage of Starvation acidosis
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Manual of Pharmacology and Its Applications to Therapeutics and Toxicology by Torald Hermann Sollmann (1922)
"This corresponds exactly to the starvation acidosis; the impaired utilization of
sugar furnishing the condition ..."
2. A Manual of Pharmacology and Its Applications to Therapeutics and Toxicology by Torald Hermann Sollmann (1922)
"Diabetic Acidosis,—This corresponds exactly to the starvation acidosis; the
impaired utilization of sugar furnishing the condition for the faulty fat ..."
3. The Basis of Symptoms: The Principles of Clinical Pathology by Ludolf Krehl (1916)
"The acetone bodies occur promptly in man and in the ape during starvation, and
in dogs, on the contrary, very tardily. This starvation acidosis disappears ..."
4. The Basis of Symptoms: The Principles of Clinical Pathology by Ludolf Krehl (1916)
"The acetone bodies occur promptly in man and in the ape during starvation, and
in dogs, on the contrary, very tardily. This starvation acidosis disappears ..."
5. The Basis of Symptoms: The Principles of Clinical Pathology by Ludolf Krehl (1917)
"The acetone bodies occur promptly in man and in the ape during starvation, and
in dogs, on the contrary, very tardily. This starvation acidosis disappears ..."
6. The Basis of Symptoms: The Principles of Clinical Pathology by Ludolf Krehl (1917)
"The acetone bodies occur promptly in man and in the ape during starvation, and
in dogs, on the contrary, very tardily. This starvation acidosis disappears ..."
7. A Text-book of Physiological Chemistry by Olof Hammarsten, Sven Gustaf Hedin (1914)
"At the same time because of the abundant formation of acetone bodies (starvation
acidosis) the quantity ..."
8. The Principles of Acidosis and Clinical Methods for Its Study by Andrew Watson Sellards (1917)
"At this time the possibility of acidosis in nephritis had only been suggested
even in the stage of uraemia, except in so far as a slight starvation acidosis ..."